Judgment :- 1. The appellants in this Civil Miscellaneous Appeal are a firm of partners carrying on business under the firm name ‘Nowsath Industries.’ The first respondent was once an employee under the firm, but he was discharged from service. Thereupon, he moved the Labour Court to compute the amount due to him from his employer. The claim before the Labour Court was made under S. 33-C (2) of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. The Labour Court, after inquiry, passed an order, on 30th December 1969 computing the firs t respondents dues from his employer at Rs. 1296-04, with subsequent interest. This decision of the Labour Court was forwarded to the State Government in due course. The State Government thereafter issued a certificate to the District Collector to recover the amount from the appellant-firm as arrears of land revenue. It may be observed, at this stage, that those certificate proceedings were in accordance with what S. 33-C(1) provided as a mode of recovery of the amount found due by the Labour Court. However, the certificate proceedings were not fruitful. The first respondent accordingly filed a suit in the District Munsif Court, Tirunelveli, asking for a decree against the appellant firm for Rs. 1296-04 together with interest amounting to Rs. 258-11, on the basis of the Labour Courts order dated 30th December, 1969. The suit was resisted by the appellant firm on the main ground that it was not maintainable. The argument urged was that the only remedy of an employee for recovery of the amount computed by a Labour Court was to have it recovered as land revenue arrears by the District Collector, and this remedy at once barred a civil suit. The trial Court accepted this defence and dismissed the suit as incompetent. On appeal, the Sub Court, Tirunelveli, disagreed with the trial Courts decision and held that the suit did lie. In this view, the Sub Court set aside the dismissal of the suit and directed the trial court to try and determine it on merits. 2. In this Civil Miscellaneous Appeal filed by the appellant-firm, the correctness of the Sub Courts order of remand is convassed. It is urged that the suit was barred because the statute had expressly provided for a particular mode of recovery, namely, under the Revenue Recovery Act. 3.
2. In this Civil Miscellaneous Appeal filed by the appellant-firm, the correctness of the Sub Courts order of remand is convassed. It is urged that the suit was barred because the statute had expressly provided for a particular mode of recovery, namely, under the Revenue Recovery Act. 3. The question of bar of jurisdiction as put forward in this case falls to be determined under S. 33-C of the Industrial Disputes Act. Sub-S. (2) of this section provides that where any workman is entitled to receive from the employer any money or any benefit which is capable of being computed in terms of money, the computation of the amount may be decided by a Labour Court specified by the appropriate Government. Sub-S.(4) provides that the decision of the Labour Court on the question shall be forwarded by it to the appropriate Government. The sub-section further provides that the amount declared by the Labour Court may be recovered in the manner provided for in sub-S.(1). 4. Sub-S. (1) of S. 33-C of the Act provides for recovery of the amount as arrears of land revenue. It says that where the Labour Courts decision is forwarded to the State Government that Government must satisfy itself as to whether the employer had paid the amount or not to the workman. If satisfied that the amount remains unpaid, then the State Government should issue a certificate to the District Collector. The District Collector shall thereupon execute the certificate and recover the amount in question as arrears of land revenue, and turn over the amount so realised to the workman concerned. The trial court relied on this provision in S. 33-C(1) and held that it operated as an implied bar of the jurisdiction of civil court to entertain and try a suit by a workman against his employee for recovery of an amount computed by a Labour Court. 5. The trial court, however, missed one important saving provision found in S 33-C(1) itself. The section, while providing for recovery of the amount as arrears of land revenue, nevertheless took care at the same time to expressly enact that this mode of recovery was not exhaustive, but left at large all other available modes of recovery open to the workman, under the law.
The section, while providing for recovery of the amount as arrears of land revenue, nevertheless took care at the same time to expressly enact that this mode of recovery was not exhaustive, but left at large all other available modes of recovery open to the workman, under the law. This saving provision is to be spelled from the words, ‘without prejudice to any other mode of recovery’, occurring in S. 33-C(1) of t he Act. I am, therefore, satisfied that far from S. 33-C(1) operating as a bar of suit, it actually saves the suit from any such bar. 6. Learned counsel for the appellants referred to a decision of the Supreme Court in Premier Automobiles Ltd. v. Kamlakar Shantaram Wadke and others 1975 2 L.L.J. 445 (S.C.). This decision only says that where a right sought to be enforced is a right created under the Industrial Disputes Act, the remedy for its enforcement can only be under that Act. This principle, however, cannot be applied to a decision of a Labour court, under S. 33-C(2) of that Act, since under that provision the Act creates no new right, but only provides for an additional remedy, in addition to the workmans existing remedies at law. 7. In these circumstances, I hold that the first respondets suit does lie for the relief as he has claimed. The order of remand passed by the Sub Court is correct. The appeal is accordingly dismissed with costs.